http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.08804
Coronal loop oscillations are common phenomena in the solar corona, which are often classified as decaying and decayless oscillations. Using the high-resolution observation measured by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) onboard the Solar Orbiter, we statistical investigate small-scale transverse oscillations with short periods (<200 s) of coronal loops in an active region, i.e., NOAA 12965. A total of 111 coronal loops are identified in EUI 174 A images, and they all reveal transverse oscillations without any significant decaying, regarding as decayless oscillations. Oscillatory periods are measured from about 11 s to 185 s, with a median period of 40 s. Thus, they are also termed as short-period oscillations. The corresponding loop lengths are measured from about 10.5 Mm to 30.2 Mm, and a strong dependence of oscillatory periods on loop lengths is established, indicating that the short-period oscillations are standing kink-mode waves in nature. Based on the coronal seismology, kink speeds are measured to about 330-1910 km/s, and magnetic field strengths in coronal loops are estimated to about 4.1-25.2 G, while the energy flux carried by decayless kink oscillations lies in the range from roughly 7 W m^(-2) to 9220 W m^(-2). Our estimations suggest that the wave energy carried by short-period decayless kink oscillations can not support the coronal heating in the active region.
D. Li and D. Long
Tue, 20 Dec 22
61/97
Comments: 42 pages,13 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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